Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Cashmere’

Kyla Briscoe (Amy King photos)

   Kyla Briscoe enjoys some rest stop shenanigans on the long trip to Wenatchee. (Amy King photos)

The most successful Wolf basketball squad in a decade.

The most successful Wolf basketball squad in a decade.

The end, when it came, came quickly.

But, while it’s painful in the moment, once time has gone by, we will look back at all that transpired this season and marvel.

Far away from home, the most successful Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad in a decade reached the end of its miracle run Saturday still surrounded by family, friends and neighbors.

A sizable chunk of Wolf faithful went East to the snow and heat of Wenatchee (and some pretty darn good burgers at a joint named Dusty’s, but I digress).

Once there, they kept the faith until the final buzzer, and then swept their young women up afterwards, tears mixing with joy over what they had accomplished.

The scoreboard was brutal, as a hyper-efficient Cashmere squad seeking its third straight trip to at least the state semifinals, ran Coupeville off the floor to a 61-25 tune.

The first, and only, lopsided loss the Wolves endured this season, it dropped their final record to 16-6.

Still, that is the most wins by any Coupeville hoops squad since the 2010 boys’ team also won 16 games, and it marked the first time CHS basketball had made it to the state playoffs since 2006.

Along the way these Wolves successfully defended their 1A Olympic League title, upended perennial power La Conner in a regular season thriller, won a playoff game for the first time in two seasons and captured the season-opening Friday Harbor Tip-Off Classic.

And they did it with a team that was raw, very young and lacking in previous varsity experience.

Entering the season, only three players had ever suited up for a varsity game, and two of their teammates were making a jump straight from playing JV last year to being varsity starters this season.

Sparked by their lone senior, the transcendent Makana Stone, who tossed in 15 Saturday to cap the third-best single-season performance in program history (427 points), the Wolves surprised their coaches, their fans, even themselves at times.

They jelled quicker than expected, players accepted their roles and showed often startling leaps forward, and they represent a program that, in its fourth season under David and Amy King, has reemerged as one to be respected.

Unfortunately, when they took the floor in the cavernous Wenatchee High School gym, they finally ran into a team too experienced, too deep, and too cutthroat to deal with.

The Bulldogs, who have back-to-back 3rd place finishes at state in which their only loss was to the eventual state champs (Lynden Christian and King’s), are better, far better, than any team Coupeville played this season.

They are quick, they attack from multiple angles, with a variety of players who can sting in a multitude of ways, and, once they put the hammer down, they don’t pick it back up until the post-game celebration.

Cashmere showed its ruthlessness from the opening tip (won for the 22nd straight time this season by Coupeville’s Stone), scoring on a quick inside cut, then knocking down two more buckets off of steals.

Down 7-0, the Wolves were staggered, the wind knocked right out of them, and they rarely had a chance to recover the rest of the evening.

Stone finally stopped the bleeding with a basket off of an in-bounds pass, and Coupeville mounted its only small bit of resistance to being steamrolled with a brief 8-7 “surge.”

Kyla Briscoe and Mia Littlejohn banged home buckets off of rebounds, Stone broke the press and slashed to the hoop for a score … and then it all pretty much ended.

Using a 14-0 run that started in the final two minutes of the first and continued through the first three minutes of the second, Cashmere stretched its lead to 28-8 and that was it.

Frustrated by a fierce defense, easily the most intense one they faced this season, the Wolves were unable to put together back-to-back buckets the rest of the game.

The Bulldogs, by contrast, mixed things up, dropping a trio of three-balls to cap the half, then working the ball inside in the second half.

The fourth quarter marked the end of one reign and perhaps the start of another.

Stone, who has been a star since day one of her freshman year, and who has been a benevolent big sister to her young flock this season, reaching out to each one with words of praise, a smile, a pat on the back, closed her run with two plays.

A free throw with a little over a minute to play marked Coupeville’s final point this season and Stone’s final point in the red and black.

At 19.4 points per game this season, she had a higher average than Brianne King did when she scored 446 in 2000-2001 and 442 points in 2002-2003, but King’s teams played 24 and 28 games in those years.

A moment after reaching out to freshman Sarah Wright — making her varsity debut on the season’s biggest stage — and giving her an encouraging, emphatic hand slap, Stone picked up her fifth and final foul.

Walking off the court with 43.7 seconds to play, she received a spontaneous standing ovation from the Wolf fans and her bench, a testament to a young woman who soared while always looking to pull her teammates up with her to share the moment.

Wright, one of the players who hold the keys to future success, earned two minutes of floor time after a season of hustle and hard work at the JV level, and she exploded off the bench.

Two seconds into her life as a varsity player she ripped down a rebound, and she took full advantage of her opportunity, snatching three caroms before the clock ran out.

Kailey Kellner netted a three-ball to back Stone in the scoring column, while Littlejohn, Kyla Briscoe and freshman Lindsey Roberts each added a bucket.

Tiffany Briscoe tickled the twines for a free throw while Lauren Grove, Allison Wenzel, Lauren Rose, Skyler Lawrence and Wright gave their all until the end.

Wolf JV players Ashlie Shank, Maddy Hilkey and Ema Smith made the trip as well, working the camera, recording stats and getting a feel for tourney play.

As they left the court, and afterwards, in the locker room and the hallway, the Wolves were sad, as you would expect, losing a game and their leader, who will graduate and head off to play college ball.

But, underneath the sadness, in some of the eyes, there was a glint.

A glint of steel. A resolve to work. To put in the time and effort in the off-season, to get bigger, strong, quicker, more efficient.

It was the look of players, of a team, that wants to come back. That will be back.

Read Full Post »

The first CHS girls' hoops team to go to state in a decade. (John Fisken and Sylvia Hurlburt photos)

   The first CHS girls’ hoops team to go to state in a decade. (John Fisken and Sylvia Hurlburt photos)

Lock up the cows. Gas up the car. Turn the lights off.

We’re off to the wilds of Eastern Washington, and, if people do what they should, there will just be a few lonely tumbleweeds rolling through the streets of Coupeville tomorrow.

Your hand-dandy guide to Super Saturday:

What: the regional round of the 1A state girls’ basketball playoffs.

Who: Coupeville (16-5), the #3 seed from District 3 vs. Cashmere (15-7), the #1 seed from District 6

Where: the main gym at Wenatchee High School

When: Saturday, Feb. 27. 4 PM tip-off (preceded at 2 by Okanogan vs. Raymond girls and followed at 6 by Connell vs. Cashmere boys)

Cost: $11 adults, $8 students (5-11, 12+ with middle or high school ASB), $8 senior citizens (62+), free for children 4 and under. Ticket good for all three games.

What’s at stake: win and you advance to Yakima Mar. 3-5 for the 8-team, double-elimination portion of state. Lose and you’re done.

The Wolf roster:

David King (head coach)
Amy King (assistant coach)

Kyla Briscoe (sophomore)
Tiffany Briscoe (junior)
Lauren Grove (junior)
Kailey Kellner (junior)
Skyler Lawrence (junior)
Mia Littlejohn (sophomore)
Lindsey Roberts (freshman)
Lauren Rose (sophomore)
Makana Stone (senior)
Allison Wenzel (sophomore)
Sarah Wright (freshman)

The regionals bracket:

http://www.cascadeathletics.com/tournament.php?act=view&league=2&page=1&school=0&sport=12&tournament_id=1855

Google Maps (Coupeville to Wenatchee):

https://www.google.com/maps/dir/Coupeville,+WA/Wenatchee,+WA/@47.8164583,-122.6461713,8z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m14!4m13!1m5!1m1!1s0x548f8b559945d759:0x992d454f7e17aae1!2m2!1d-122.6862804!2d48.2198208!1m5!1m1!1s0x549bcc43dd054f43:0x746e63024633d190!2m2!1d-120.3103494!2d47.4234599!3e0

Read Full Post »

(Amy King photo)

   CHS hoops stars (l to r) Lauren Rose, Makana Stone, Lauren Grove and Kailey Kellner play for one of 16 teams to still have a shot at a 1A state title. (Amy King photo)

It’s Makana vs. Makenna.

The Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad will face off with District 6’s #1 team, Cashmere, in the regional round of the state hoops tourney.

The Wolves (16-5), the #3 seed from District 3, will play the Bulldogs (15-7) Saturday, Feb. 27 at Wenatchee High School.

Tip-off is 4 PM.

That means the Wolves get to travel 163.7 miles (one way), double what they did for districts, while Cashmere will head just 11.6 miles up the road for the game.

Tickets (good for all day) will be $11 for adults and $8 for students (ages 5-11 and 12-18 with a middle school/high school ASB) and senior citizens (62 and over).

Children under five get in for free, so someone should think about putting together a preschool rooter bus of pro-Wolf fans to rock the joint.

Win and Coupeville, which is in the middle of its best postseason run since 2006, books a stay at the Yakima SunDome Mar. 3-5 for the eight-team, double-elimination portion of the state tourney.

To get there, the Wolves will have to beat a school which has finished third at state the past two seasons.

Cashmere’s only losses in six games at state over the past two years have come at the hands of the teams that went on to win the state title.

In 2013-2014 it was Lynden Christian, while King’s toppled the Bulldogs in 2014-2015.

Playing in the Caribou Trail League, a four-team conference in Eastern Washington that includes Chelan, Omak and Cascade, Cashmere went 8-1 in league play this season.

They have three players averaging between 12 and 14 points — 6-foot-1 junior post Abbie Johnson, 5-8 sophomore guard Cami Knishka and 5-9 senior guard Makenna Faulkner.

Coupeville counters with 5-11 senior post Makana Stone, who has had a double-double every game while throwing down 19.6 points a night, and a very stingy defense.

The Wolves, who are scoring 43.1 a game, are surrendering just 32.9.

Cashmere averages 54.2 on offense and 38.6 on defense.

When the two squads did lose this season, it came against top-level competition.

None of Coupeville’s losses were by more than eight points (they also lost by 2, 3, 4 and 4), and two of those teams (Bellevue Christian and Charles Wright Academy) also advanced to regionals.

Cashmere absorbed three double-digit losses in its seven defeats, but faced a brutal schedule.

Two losses came against 2A schools (Ephrata and East Valley of Spokane), three against 1A schools (Chelan, Zillah and Granger) and two against 2B schools (undefeated Okanogan and Mabton).

Five of those seven schools made it to regionals, with only Ephrata and Chelan having been eliminated.

This will be the 20th state playoff game in Coupeville girls hoops history (the Wolves are 7-12 all-time) and the 23rd for Cashmere (12-10), but the first time they have faced each other.

The two schools have a connection through Randy King.

Currently the head track coach at CHS (he did a 20-year stint as Wolf boys’ basketball coach from 1991-2011), King was the assistant coach on the Cashmere boys’ hoops squad that won the 1980 state title.

To see the regional draw, pop over to:

http://www.wiaa.com/Brackets/T1213.pdf

Read Full Post »